13 S.D. 501 | S.D. | 1900
This is an action to quiet titie to a tract of farm land in McCook county. Judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiff appeals. . The case was tried by the court without a jury. The court found, in substance, as follows: That on the 24th day of May, 1893, Frederick T. Day, of Milwaukee, Wis., was the owner in fee of the land described in the complaint; that on the 2d day of June 1893, Melvin Grigsby commenced an action in the circuit court of Minnehaha county against said Day, and in said action attached the property described in the complaint in this action, and on the 3d day of June, 1893, duly filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of McCook county a notice of the pendency of the action; that the subsequent proceedings of the action of Grigsby against Day resulted in a judgment for said Grigsby, which said judgment was regularly filed and docketed on the 12th day of October, 1895; that under and by virtue of said judgment the land in controversy was sold at execution sale, and-on the 6th day of December, 1895, a certificate of sheriff’s sale was-duly issued to said Grigsby, who was the purchaser at said sale; that said sheriff’s certificate was assigned by said Grigsby to William H. Lyon, and thereafter, on the 30 th day of December, 1896, a sheriff’s deed was issued to said Lyons, and duly recorded in the register of deeds’-office in McCook county; “(6)
The appellant contends: (1) That as the deed from Day ■ to the bank was in fact a mortgage, and was recorded in the book of deeds, it did not give constructive notice; (2) that the deed being in fact a mortgage, and it being agreed between the parties that it should be kept from record to protect the credit of Day, it was fraudulent as to creditors; (3) that the rule established by this court inRoblin v. Palmer, 9S. D. 36, 67* N. W. 949, that an unrecorded deed is good as against an attaching creditor, does not apply to an unrecorded mortgage; (4) that the' deed being in fact a mortgage, and the consideration being “§>1 and other valuable consideration,” it was void, as to other creditors, for uncertainty; (5) that the conveyance was purely voluntary, and as such void as to creditors; (6) that the delivery of the deed to the bank of which Day was president, and the placing of the same in the bank vault, was not a good delivery of the deed; (7) that it was error for the court to find that the deed was a mortgage, and as such was a
Before proceeding to discuss the case upon the merits, we will refer to a question of practice raised by the respondents which is that the sixth finding of fact is not supported by the evidence. The respondents are not in a position to raise this question, for the reason that they made no motion for a new trial. A party who claims that *the findings are not supported by the evidence should move for a new trial upon that ground, and, if the same is denied, he may take an appeal to this court from the order denying such motion; otherwise, he is concluded by the findings. The adverse party may also appeal. We have no such proceeding in our practice as a cross assignment of error unless based upon a proper motion for a new trial, and an appeal from the order denying the same. In Hayne, New Trial, § 244, that learned author says: “Findings are conclusive if not attacked in the mode prescribed by the statute. In the early history 'of the court it was supposed this rule did not apply to equity cases. It was at that time supposed that, as under the old chancery practice, an appeal took up the whole case, and that the appellate court examined the evidence as if it were a court of original jurisdiction. But this theory was soon exploded, and the rule that findings were conclusive in all cases unless attached in the modes pointed out by the statute became well settled. ” In our view » of the case however, this finding is not very material, as it omits one essential qualification contained in the statute. Section 4350, Comp. Laws, provides: ‘‘The fact that a transfer was made subject to defeasance on a condition may, for the purpose of showing such transfer to be a mortgage,.be proved,
The decision of this court, as well as that of the supreme court of California's based upon the theory, as will be observed, that an attaching creditor is not a purchaser, within the meaning of the statute. This view is supported by the provisions of
It is further contended by the appellant that the mortgage is fraudulent as to creditors, but the question of fraud is not raised by the pleadings, nor was there any finding upon that subject; hence the question of fraud is not properly before us. The conveyance cannot be considered as voluntary in the sense that it was without consideration, as it appears from the findings that Day was indebted to the bank at the time he executed the deed intended as a mortgage in a large amount.
It is further contended that there was no delivery of the deed, but the court finds that the deed was “made, executed, duly acknowledged, and delivered” to the defendant bank, and we are of the opinion that this finding is clearly supported by the evidence,
It is further contended that under the provisions of Sections 4370 and 4371 the deed in this case, being recorded as a deed, and not as a mortgage, did not give constructive notice to any one of its contents, and was in fact void as against all parties other than the grantor, or his heirs or devisees, and persons having actual notice. The two sections referred to read as follows:
“Sec. 4370. Every grant of real property, or of any estate therein, which appears, by any other writing, to be intended as a mortgage within the meaning of Chapter 1 of this title, must be recorded as a mortgage; and if such grant and other writing explanatory of its true character are not recorded together at the same time and place, the grantee can derive no benefit from such record.
“Sec 4371. When a grant of real property purports to be an absolute conveyance, but is intended to be defeasible on the performance of certain conditions, such grant is not defeated pr affected as against any person other than the grantee or hig
If the plaintiff had been a purchaser in good faith, without notice, and for value, of the property in controversy directly from Day, or had deraigned her title through any such purchaser, the contention of counsel might be tenable; but we are of the opinion that these two sections must be construed in connection with Sections 3293, 4350, and 4357, and that, therefore, in order for a party to claim the benefit of these sections it must appear that he is a purchaser or incumbrancer in good faith, without notice, and for value. The plaintiff, as we have seen, is not such a purchaser or incumbrancer. She acquired only such title under the attachment proceedings as Day had on the 2d day of June, 1893, when the writ of attachment was levied opon the property; and, as we have seen, at that time Day had mortgaged -the properly to the defendants to secure a large amount of indebtedness, and the appellant therefore only secured such right as Day had in the equity of redemption of the mortgaged property. Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the court below is affirmed.